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Charges were on pace to reach $300,000 by the end of the year. Mary Swift, director of Albuquerque's food and nutrition services, said her department had no way to absorb that debt as it had in the past. "We can't use any federal lunch program money to pay what they call bad debt. It has to come out of the general budget and of course that takes it from some other department," Swift said. With the new policy, the school district has collected just over $50,000 from parents since the beginning of the year. It also identified 2,000 students eligible to receive free or reduced-price lunches, and more children in the lunch program means more federal dollars for the district. School officials said the policy was under consideration for some time and parents were notified last fall. Families with unpaid charges are reminded with an automated phone call each night and notes are sent home with children once a week. Swift added that the cheese sandwiches -- about 80 of the 46,000 meals the district serves daily
-- can be considered a "courtesy meal," rather than an alternate meal. Some districts, she noted, don't allow children without money to eat anything. Albuquerque Public Schools "has historically gone above and beyond as far as treating children with dignity and respect and trying to do what's best with for the child, and I think this is just another example," Swift said. ___ On the Net: Albuquerque Public Schools: http://ww2.aps.edu/ New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty: http://www.nmpovertylaw.org/index.html Food Research and Action Center: http://www.frac.org/
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